Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0086543 (cataract)
29,165 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mutations in the LMNA gene encoding lamins A/C are responsible for Hutchinson-Gilford syndrome (HGS), a disorder of premature aging. Cataract is 1 of the main manifestations. The most prevalent mutation in Hutchinson-Gilford syndrome is C1824T, which activates a cryptic splice donor site to produce an abnormal lamin A protein. The purpose of this study was to investigate a possible association of the C1824T mutation with age-related cataract. Anterior lens capsule material was collected during cataract extraction surgery from 178 patients with senile cataract during 2007-2008. DNA and mRNA were extracted and sequenced for the LMNA gene. DNA and cDNA were screened for the C1824T mutation, which was not detected. Messenger RNA (mRNA) expression was normal, with no truncation. We found that human age-related nuclear cataract is not associated with LMNA gene mutations or truncation of lamin A.
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PMID:C1824T mutation in the LMNA gene has no association with senile cataract. 2207 58

This study investigates how epithelial cells moving together function to coordinate their collective movement to repair a wound. Using a lens ex vivo mock cataract surgery model we show that region-specific reorganization of cell-cell junctions, cytoskeletal networks and myosin function along apical and basal domains of an epithelium mediates the process of collective migration. An apical junctional complex composed of N-cadherin/ZO-1/myosin II linked to a cortical actin cytoskeleton network maintains integrity of the tissue during the healing process. These cells' basal domains often preceded their apical domains in the direction of movement, where an atypical N-cadherin/ZO-1 junction, linked to an actin stress fiber network rich in phosphomyosin, was prominent in cryptic lamellipodia. These junctions joined the protruding forward-moving lamellipodia to the back end of the cell moving directly in front of it. These were the only junctions detected in cryptic lamellipodia of lens epithelia migrating in response to wounding that could transmit the protrusive forces that drive collective movement. Both integrity of the epithelium and ability to effectively heal the wound was found to depend on myosin mechanical cues.
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PMID:Regional-specific alterations in cell-cell junctions, cytoskeletal networks and myosin-mediated mechanical cues coordinate collectivity of movement of epithelial cells in response to injury. 2439 50